Skip to main content

13 docs tagged with "ctf_18.2"

View all tags

Create and View Baselines

Create a Baseline when you accomplish specific milestones in your project or when you release or deliver a product. You can create a Baseline from either a Baseline Definition or from the ground up.

Create, View, and Delete Baseline Definitions

A Baseline Definition is the filter criteria that is used to create a Baseline from a set of selected configuration items such as Tracker Artifacts, Documents, Source Code Repositories (only Git and Subversion are supported), File Releases, and Binaries (only Nexus binaries are supported) in a given TeamForge project.

Install Nexus

TeamForge supports only Nexus 3 integration. This page walks you through the installation procedure for Nexus 3 and upgrade procedure from Nexus 2 to Nexus 3.

Linkify Custom Object IDs in Code Browser

Include custom object IDs in your commit messages and have them automatically converted to hyperlinks. This is possible if you set up custom object ID mapping for the repository.

logger-db-query

Use the logger-db-query script to enable or disable logging for queries.

Review Baselines

A Baseline or a Project Baseline, once created can be reviewed. During the review cycle, the Baseline or the Project Baseline undergoes various status transitions as defined by the Baseline Administrator.

TeamForge Binary Integration Overview

An important aspect of the end-to-end development lifecycle is the creation and storage of software packages that are often binary artifacts. In the Java world, these are usually reusable jars that are used by other projects. Binary artifact repository managers are software systems that manage, version, and store binary artifacts. Example of such repository manager is Sonatype Nexus.

TeamForge License

When you purchase a TeamForge license, you get the right to assign licenses to a specified number of users.